Four famous Vietnamese prisoners of the Communists speak via Paltalk on December 1
Four famous
Vietnamese prisoners of the Communists speak via Paltalk on December 1
The four famous
prisoners and their periods of imprisonment in the Communist gulags of Vietnam are:
Nguyen Chi Thien (27 years), Vo Dai Ton (12 years), Phan Nhat Nam
(14 years). They are moderated and
connected by Ly Tong Ba, a Brigadier General of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) (12 years).
You can find their
descriptions and information about connecting to Paltalk in Vietnamese on http://www.vietvungvinh.com/Portal.asp?goto=VietNam/2007/20071128_03.htm
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Here are brief histories of the famous prisoners in English
and reference to their writings.
Ly Tong Ba. General Ly Tong Ba was captured on April
30, 1975, while commanding his 23rd Armored Division who were
fighting their way to Saigon in hope of
joining with other ARVN regiments. His leadership
was described in Time Magazine as “lion-hearted.” General Ly Tong Ba, originally a chief of the
Binh Duong Province,
was a hero of the 1972 Easter Offensive.
This victory by the Republic of
Vietnam was squandered by the
Americans in the Peace Accords in Paris. It was expected that he would be executed by
the NVA but instead Ly Tong Ba survived twelve years imprisonment in the
Communist gulag. He is the author of Hoi Ky: 25 Nam Khoi Lua (25 Years of
Vietnam War).
Phan Nhat Nam is
known as South Vietnam’s
most famous war reporter. He was an
officer in the South Vietnamese Airborne Division and served as Secretary to
the Joint Military Committee at the Paris Peace Accords in 1973. He was imprisoned by the Communists for
fourteen years. He is the author of Mua He Do Lua (Fiery Red Summer) about
the Spring Offensive of 1972 and the relationship to the battle for An Loc in
1963. He is also the author of Nhung Cot Tru Chong Giu Que Huong (The
Stories Must be Told) and Tu Binh va Hoa
Binh (Peace and Prisoner of War). He
has written for Talawas and has much informational material and writing on
Nguyet San Viet Nam website. There is an
extensive interview with him on Radio Free Asia dated April 30, 2005. Phan Nhat Nam
is a commentator on SBTN and lives in Orange
County, California.
Nguyen Chi Thien is
a dissident poet who was first imprisoned following the Resolution #49
establishing the Reeducation Camps of the Communist Party of Vietnam (CVP) in
December 1961. For his three periods of
imprisonment totaling 27 years between 1961 and 1991 there was only one trial,
charged with “antipropaganda.” Not
allowed pen and paper in prison, Nguyen Chi Thien composed his poetry in his memory
and recited them to friends, who memorized them and spoke them aloud in the
streets of Hanoi and Haiphong.
In 1979, during a brief period of release, Mr. Thien—then age
thirty-nine—brought a manuscript of his poems to the British Embassy in Hanoi, asking that they be
published “in the free world.” He was
arrested outside the gates after this delivery (being refused asylum) and spent
twelve more years in the Communist gulag, which he did not expect to
survive. He was released in November
1991 due to international pressure.
Nguyen Chi Thien is the author of Hoa
Dia Nguc, the complete collection of poems in Vietnamese written before and
after the first manuscript was brought to the British Embassy, and a collection
of stories of the Hoa Lo prison, published in Vietnamese in 2001, translated
into English and published in 2007 as the Hoa
Lo/Hanoi Hilton Stories by the Yale University Council on Southeast Asia
Studies.
Vo Dai Ton was a
Colonel of the South Vietnamese Army Special Forces who earned 43 medals for
his outstanding military career and service to his country. Sentenced to a reeducation camp in 1975, he
escaped to Australia
a year later. Despite grave risk to his
personal health and safety, Colonel Vo Dai Ton secretly returned to Vietnam
in 1981. Captured a year later, he was
subjected to ten years of solitary confinement, starved and tortured when he
would not concur with a statement prepared by the Vietnamese government that he
acted on behalf of the Central Intelligence Agency of the United States. He writes poetry with the pseudonym Hoang
Phong Linh (the Poet), publishing a book in 1993 following his release in
December 1991 due to international pressure.
He was honored with a Resolution by the Washington State House of
Representatives (U.S.A.) in 1994. Col.
Vo Dai Ton lives in Australia.
These brief histories
in English are written in the hope they may be useful for the planned Paltalk
event on December 1, 2007. Scholarly
references used for preparation are available on request.
Jean Libby, editor
VietAm Review
editor@vietamreview.net